MUSIC CHATTER AND MATTER

Taxing Ourselves to Death

Posted over 2 years ago
This past week, Congress had an opportunity to permanently repeal the death tax by amending the Tax Collection Responsibility Act of 2007 to include language that ends the estate tax forever. This would have been a good provision in an overall bad bill. 212 Democrats were enough to keep this spectre looming on the horizon if the Bush tax cuts are not renewed in 2011. The bill passed without this silver lining and now we face big in increases taxes and penalties in the next five years. The underlying attitude behind this bill, and the estate tax, is what I find so distressing about tax policy in this country today - that being a growing disregard for property rights, which are so important to the American dream. The basic tenets of the American dream are that through hard work and ingenuity, you can earn a better life for yourself, and you can give your children a better start than you had. Surveying American history this vision has played out through steady economic progress and growth from one generation to the next. Our prosperity now is our reward for hard work and achievement in the past. Today we are the strongest economy in the world, and have much to be proud of, but Congress doesn’t seem to understand that we did not tax our way here. Conversely, a nation certainly can tax its way out of prosperity, and that’s one danger I see with this bill, and with policies like the death tax. The death tax punishes one of the greatest and ultimate satisfactions of achieving the American dream – the knowledge that your life’s work is an investment in your family’s future. Instead of being able to focus on hard work, however, death tax provisions keep countless estate planners working countless hours helping Americans negotiate through complicated tax laws just to keep the fruits of their life’s work out of the squandering hands of government. Other anti-property rights provisions in the Tax Collection Responsibility Act make desperate last attempts to extract the most amount of revenue possible from expatriots on their way out the door. A telling signal that a country is taxing itself to death is capital flight and expatriation. When successful Americans no longer feel their property is secure from government thieves, and they have too much to lose by staying, they vote with their feet and go elsewhere. This country is poorer for the loss of that citizen’s investment here, but it is their right to keep and enjoy what they have built up. How dare Congress or the IRS try to deny them that? And what message does that send to the next generation of young entrepreneurs? It is troubling to me that this country is chasing away wealth, while entitlements recklessly grow. The power to tax is the power to destroy, and we are making strides towards destroying prosperity but expanding the welfare state. This is a dangerous and untenable trend. 186 Republicans and 10 Democrats voted with me last week to kill the Death Tax. It is my hope that we will get another chance in the future to end this punitive and un-American tax for good.

Comments (9)

  1. Marigold says I assume you are not a representative in the House of Representatives, who wrote this? It seems pretty spot on as far as I am concerned.
    Permalink posted 10/15/2007
  2. Cody B says Without doing a ton of research I don't want the tax repealed.Rich folk already have a leg up in life even without inheritances. Their kid's should earn it just like their parents did. even with the tax some folks are passing on some serious weatlh. Wealth that becomes income for the person who gets it.
    Permalink posted 10/15/2007
  3. TBoom says The estate tax is not a death tax. It is a luxury tax. It only effects the extremely rich who have more than enough money to provide for their children financially. Do I think the estate tax should be scaled by cost of living in each municipality? Yes. Do I think the estate tax should be completely repealed? No way. Do the rich have a right to be the American equivalent of a landed aristocracy? Adjusting the alternative minimal tax to be scaled to cost of living in different municipalities is more of a needed change in the tax code than any change in the estate tax.
    Permalink posted 10/16/2007
  4. RGM says So TBoom, the Govert, should still have the luxtury to take away your home that your family left to you because they created a recession based on job market changes after you have been well educated or get sick and get x-ed out of your helping hand of a pyramid scheme (Insurance)? I am not rich, but I have nothing againt being rich, I hate, greed, and covetinous, no matter what class of society. I got the artlcle here... Click here for the full article: http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2007/tst101407.htm
    Permalink posted 10/16/2007
  5. TBoom says The government is not some foreign body. It is us. Our country needs to generate money for the government to "provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and insure domestic tranquility" effectively. Our tax code is just our way of saying how to equitably generate this money. Are you willing to pay a higher tax so the rich can have their taxes lowered? We Americans like to think of ourselves as a meritocracy. An estate take for the extremely wealthy is entirely in keeping with the values of a meritocracy. I do think our country should work more towards really being a meritocracy and campaign finance reform would be great to keep the government as an instrument of the people and not just of big business.
    Permalink posted 10/17/2007
  6. RGM says So owning home bad and stupid? That makes sense! And resonsible with your money also! Thats what I'd tell my kid wouldn't you? You don't want your kid to lose his house do you?
    Permalink posted 10/18/2007
  7. TBoom says Owning one's home is not bad or stupid. That is why I think the estate tax should be scaled for cost of living (including housing) in each municipality. Should somebody's three vacation homes be exempt from a luxury tax? Help your child buy his/her own home and then they won't have to worry about your estate tax if you pass on before they do. If you are wealthy enough to be worrying about the estate tax, you probably have plenty of resources to help your children buy their own home. You never did answer my question of whether you would be willing to pay higher taxes so the rich can have their taxes lowered.
    Permalink posted 10/19/2007
  8. RGM says No they should pay there own if the granted the tax exist, they have there shelter as it is. Plus I know with income tax there is a ceiling, don't know with property taxes. How about we pay a buck a year for taxes for everything! Thats all! Rich, Poor, Middile Class! Sounds great to me! Now We should own homes!
    Permalink posted 10/19/2007
  9. RGM says No career polititions...
    Permalink posted 10/19/2007

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